Ontario Shared Liquidity Impact Estimator
Model how shared liquidity agreements would transform Ontario's poker landscape. Explore player pool growth, tournament prize impact, cash game availability, and more. Updated March 2026.
Ontario's Current Player Pool
Ontario's regulated market is ring-fenced. Players can only compete against others in the province.
Choose a Liquidity Scenario
Select a hypothetical shared liquidity model to see projected impact.
Projected Impact
Visual Comparison
Room-by-Room Shared Liquidity Readiness
How each Ontario room is positioned if shared liquidity becomes reality.
What Is Shared Liquidity in Online Poker?
Shared liquidity refers to the practice of combining player pools from different regulated jurisdictions into a single network. When poker rooms operate under shared liquidity, a player in Ontario could sit at the same cash game table or enter the same tournament as a player in Michigan, New Jersey, or even France.
Without shared liquidity, each regulated market is "ring-fenced." Ontario players can only play against other Ontario players. This limits field sizes, restricts the variety of available games, and reduces the overall prize money on offer.
Why Is Ontario Currently Ring-Fenced?
Ontario launched its regulated iGaming market in April 2022 under the oversight of the Alcohol and Gaming Commission of Ontario (AGCO) and iGaming Ontario. The regulatory framework was designed as a standalone provincial market. Each operator licensed in Ontario runs a player pool exclusively for Ontario-based players.
This approach prioritizes consumer protection and regulatory control, but it comes at a cost: smaller player pools than what these same operators offer in their global or multi-state networks elsewhere.
The European Precedent: France, Spain, and Portugal
Europe provides the strongest real-world example of shared liquidity in action. In 2018, France, Spain, and Portugal signed an agreement allowing regulated poker operators in all three countries to merge their player pools.
The results were significant. PokerStars, which operates in all three markets under the .FR, .ES, and .PT domains, saw tournament field sizes grow substantially. Sunday majors that previously attracted a few hundred players regularly broke 1,000+ entries. Cash game traffic increased across all stake levels, and high-stakes tables that had been nearly empty became active again.
This European model demonstrates that shared liquidity can coexist with strong regulatory oversight while delivering better outcomes for players.
What Would Need to Change for Ontario?
Bringing shared liquidity to Ontario would require several steps:
- Interprovincial agreements between Ontario and other Canadian provinces that choose to regulate online poker
- International regulatory treaties between Canadian and foreign gambling regulators (similar to the EU model)
- Technical standards for cross-jurisdiction player verification, geolocation, and responsible gambling enforcement
- Operator readiness to merge separate player databases while maintaining compliance in each jurisdiction
No formal agreements are in place as of March 2026. However, the topic has been discussed at industry conferences and in regulatory consultations.
How to Use This Estimator
This tool lets you model different shared liquidity scenarios and see how they would affect Ontario's poker ecosystem:
- Choose a scenario from the four options: Ontario Only (current baseline), Ontario + Canadian provinces, Ontario + US states, or Full International Pool
- Fine-tune the multiplier using the slider to adjust the player pool size within any range
- Review projected metrics including weekly active players, peak concurrent players, cash table counts, tournament field sizes, Sunday guarantees, and Sit & Go wait times
- Compare visually using the bar chart that shows current vs. projected values side by side
- Check room readiness to see which Ontario operators are best positioned for shared liquidity based on their existing network experience
For a deeper look at shared liquidity and what it means for Ontario's poker future, read our complete shared liquidity guide.
Shared Liquidity Timeline
Frequently Asked Questions
What is shared liquidity in online poker?
Shared liquidity means players from different regulated jurisdictions can sit at the same tables and enter the same tournaments. Instead of Ontario players only competing against other Ontario players, they would join a combined pool with players from other provinces or countries.
Is shared liquidity available in Ontario right now?
No. As of 2026, Ontario's online poker market is ring-fenced, meaning players can only play against others physically located in Ontario. Shared liquidity would require new regulatory agreements between AGCO, iGaming Ontario, and partner jurisdictions.
How would shared liquidity change tournament prize pools?
Larger player pools directly translate to bigger tournament fields, which means larger prize pools and more overlay-free events. A 5x increase in the player pool could roughly double or triple typical Sunday tournament guarantees.
Which Ontario poker rooms would benefit most from shared liquidity?
GGPoker and PokerStars would likely benefit most. GGPoker already operates a global network and has experience integrating shared pools. PokerStars has a proven track record with the European shared liquidity agreement between France, Spain, and Portugal. Both rooms would be able to leverage existing infrastructure to offer larger player pools quickly. See our best poker sites guide for full room reviews.
What is the European shared liquidity model?
In 2018, France, Spain, and Portugal created an agreement allowing their regulated poker sites to share player pools. This significantly boosted tournament fields and cash game traffic across all three markets, providing a real-world precedent for how Ontario could benefit.
How long until Ontario gets shared liquidity?
There is no confirmed timeline. Shared liquidity requires interprovincial or international regulatory agreements. While discussions are ongoing, no formal deals have been announced as of March 2026. The European model took several years from initial talks to launch.